The
Moonshaft (by Antonin T. Horak) (This article was published in March
1965 in NSS
News)

EDITOR'S NOTE: This is an article by the author from his own journal.
Antonin T. Horak was a captain in the Slovak Uprising during World War II, and
he tells of his discovery of a strange „moonshaft“ in a cave in Czechoslovakia.
Dr. Horak is a linguist who is now a U. S. Citizen living in Pueblo, Colorado
and he hopes to persuade speleologists to study his moonshaft further and learn
its true nature. The illustrations were traced from sketches that he made 20
years ago in the cave, which is located near the villages of Plavnica and
Lubocna, at about 49,2o N, 20,7o E. The journal was written on the spot and
starts when Dr. Horak and two of his wounded soldiers were found by peasant and
rescued from capture.

October 23, 1944.

Early yesterday, Sunday, October 22nd, Slavek found us in a trench and hid
us in this grotto. Today at nightfall he and his daughter Hanka came with food
and medicine. We had no eaten since Friday, and all we had had before, during
last two battles, was maize bread and not enough of that. Our commissary had
been on its last legs anyway; the supply carriers had been dispersed by
confusion and the enemy.

Saturday afternoon the remnants of our battalion (184 men and officers, a
quarter wounded, 16 stretcher cases) were retreating through the snow of the
north slope. My company was the rear guard. At dawn Sunday, the two 70 mm guns
opened up at us from close range - about 300 m. Having held our position for 12
hours, I ordered a gradual breakup of the skirmish and slip-off. But in our
left trench someone became careless, and that drew 2 direct hits - shells, two
wounded. Arriving there I bumped into the enemy, caught a bayonet and bullet
with my left palm and blow on my head, which put me out. Without my fur cap it
might be fractured.

I came to when someone was pulling me from the trench, a tall peasant. He
packed snow on my hand, and grinned. Then this rough and ready Samaritan
grabbed Jurek, stripped off his pants, yanked the long sliver of steel from his
thigh, and planted him bare-bottomed and gasping into a heap of snow. Martin,
with a slash across and into his belly was tenderly bandaged. Building a
stretcher the peasant introduced himself as Slavek, a sheepman, owner of the
pastures hereabouts. With Slavek hauling and guiding, it took us four hours to
reach this cranny.

Slavek moved rocks in the cranny and opened a cleft, the entrance to this
roomy grotto. Placing Martin in the niche, we were astonished to see Slavek
become ceremonious: he crossed himself, each of us, the grotto, and, with a
deep bow, its back wall, where a hole came to my attention.

About to leave us, Slavek went through the same holy rites, and begged me
not to go further into his cave. I accompanied him to fetch pine boughs, and he
told me that only once, with his father and grandfather, had he been in this
cave; that it is a huge maze, full of pits which they never wanted to fathom,
pockets of poisonous air , and "certainly haunted". I was back in the
grotto with my men at about midnight, exhausted, head very painful, soothed it
with snow. Martin was unconscious, Jurek feverish. For breakfast-lunch-dinner
he and I had hot water, and, thank God, I had my pipe. I placed warm stones
around Martin, and Jurek got the first watch.

Miserable night. Martin at time conscious; I gave him 3 aspirins and hot
water to sip with drops of Slivovitz. Jurek hobbled hungrily around the two
German helmets in which he boiled water to which I added 10 drops of Slivovitz,
our breakfast. With this deluge of snow, avalanches imminent, and enemy skiers
roaming, Slavek may not be able to get through to us with food for days to
come. And neither should I try hunting and track up the landscape while I have
two immobilized men on my hands. But here we have this cave which Slavek knows
only partially; it may have more than this known entrance, and it may contain
hibernating animals. These possibilities I mulled over while Jurek was chewing
pine bark, and, as expected, he implored me to go poaching into Slavek's cave
and promised to keep mum. And I was not only starved but equally eager to find
out what makes self assured Slavek scared enough to invoke the Deities. I
started my cave tour with rifle, lantern, torches, pick. After a not too
devious nor dangerous walk and some squeezings, always taking the easiest and
marking side passages, I came, after about 1 1/2 hours, into a long, level
passage, and its end upon a barrel-sized hole.

Crawling through and still kneeling, I froze in amazement - there stands
something like a large, black silo, framed in white. Regaining breath I thought
that this is a bizarre, natural wall or curtain of black salt, or ice, or lava.
But I became perplexed, then awestruck when I saw it is a glass-smooth flank of
seemingly man-made structure which reaches into the rocks on all sides.
Beautifully, cylindrically curved it indicates a huge body with a diameter of
about 25 meters. Where this structure and the rocks meet, large stalagmites and
stalactites form that glittering white frame. The wall is uniformly
blue-blackish, its material seems to combine properties of steel, flint, rubber
- the pick made no marks and bounced off vigorously. Even the thought of a
tower-sized artifact; embedded in rock in the middle of an obscure mountain, in
a wild region where not even legend knows about ruins, mining, industry;
overgrown with age-old cave deposits, is bewildering - the fact is appalling.

Fig. 1.

Not immediately discernible, a crack in the wall appears from below, about
20 to 25 cm wide, tapers off and disappears into the cave's ceiling, 2 to 5 cm
wide. Its insides, right and left are pitch black and have fist sized, sharp
valleys and crests. The crack's bottom is rather smooth trough of yellow
limestone, and drops very steeply (about 60o) into the wall. I threw a lighted
torch through; it fell and extinguished with loud cracklings and hissings as if
a white hot plougshare were dropped into a bucket.

Driven to explore, and believing me thin enough to get through this upside
/down keyhole, I went in. Wriggling sideways, injured hand and head below and
steeply downward, nearly standing on my head, cramped, though my right arm with
the lamp could move in the extended crack above me, the crush got the better of
me and I had to get out, back, quickly. And that became a struggle. When out
and breath regained, I was too fascinated by the whole riddle and determined to
get at it. For the day I had enough and had to think about tactics.

I was in camp at about 4 p.m. Jurek had washed Martin, kept him between warm
stones, and I gave him three aspirins and hot water with Slivovitz to sip. I
explained to Jurek that the hunt in the cave requires much smoke, poles, and
rope. Thank god, Slavek and Hanka did come with provisions. When they left I
accompanied them to fetch torch boughs, was back in camp at about 2 a.m., dead
tired, but finally we had eaten - Jurek too much - and I got the 2nd watch.

October 24, 1944.

Peaceful night; Martin sipped fever-tea with honey; hope we can pull him
through. Jurek`s posterior is not even swollen, but my head still is. I cut our
belts, braided 8 meters of solid rope. At 10 p.m. was at the wall; anchored the
rope over a stick across the crack, and keeping it slung over my shoulder,
forced myself again into the grim maw. Like yesterday, the lamp, this time
carbide, was on a stick ahead within the jaw above. When it came through and
down it swung freely over some void into which I could not see, and there was
again rushing as if from agaited waters. And, unable to turn, I feared a
water-filled pit ahead and to end in it - literally - in a headstand.

I wriggled upward, back again; my clothes caught on the protrusions,
descended on my shoulders and head, and formed a plug. The resulting struggle
nearly caused me to burned alive. When out and on my feet, I was shaking from
exhaustion, and had lurid visions.

There are no loose stones about the wall and so I hacked stalagmites into
short rolls and bowled them through the crack. They rolled on, causing enormous
echoes, and knocked to a standstill, indicating a solid floor and room to turn.
I launched the unlit torches after the stones, undressed, keeping the shirt
only, and went after the stones and torches. Already acquainted with the meanst
fangs in the crack, I came through with only few cuts, dropped a little, rolled
down an incline and was stopped by a wall which felt familiar, satiny smooth
like the front wall.

My lamp was still burning next to me, but here were confusing sounds.
Lighting like torches, I saw that I was in spacious, curved, black shaft formed
by cliff-like walls which intersect and form a crescent-shaped, nearly vertical
tunnel, rather shaft. I cannot describe the sombernessand the endless
whisperings, rustlings and roaring sounds, abnormal echoes from my breathing
and movements. The floor is the incline over which I rolled in, a solid lime
"pavement".

Fig. 2.

All the lights together did not reach the ceiling or where these walls end
or meet. The horizontal distance between the apexes of the concave backside of
the front wall and the convex back wall is about 25 meters. To explore further
I needed more light and my pick, which does not fit through the crack and must
be taken apart.

I left jubilant, in a sort of enchantment mixed with determination to
explore this large structure, which I believe is unique, singular.

This time with my head up, with no clothes to ensnare and burn me, I was
through the crack fairly unscathed, dressed, smoked a pipe, and was underway to
my men. I tried to catch some bats, but caught none. Jurek was boiling potatoes
and mutton and therefore inclined to excuse my bad huntsmanship; he even
appreciated its hardships when he had to grease the scratches on my back, and
my shirt.

Martin had a crumb of bread with honeyed fevertea. After 6 p.m. I went for a
new load of torches, was back at about 10 p.m. Jurek got both watches.

October 25, 1944.

We had a good night. Martin seems to mend. Am glad that Jurek`s thigh is not
yet well enough for him to want to go with me poaching for bats. It is better
that he knows nothing about the cave's secret.

I went directly to the wall, undressed like yesterday, smeared muttonfat
over me, slid my things through the crack and went in, feet first. Extending
the carbide lamp upon a double pole, with four torches burning, still the upper
ends of the cliffs remain in the dark. I fired two bullets up, parallel to the
walls. The report caused roars, as from an express train, but no impact was
visible. then I fired one bullet on each wall, aiming some 15 meters upward
from me, got large blue green sparks and such sounds that I had to hold my ears
between my knees, and flames danced wildly.

Assembling the pick caused more uproars. I proved the „pavement“, and
started digging where the lime is thin, in the horns of the crescent. At right
is dry loam; at left I came, at about half a meter, upon a pocket of enamel
from the teeth of some large animal; took one canine and one molar, replaced
the rest. Digging on nearby, the backwall has, at about 1 1/2 m below the
pavement, a vertical, finally fluted, undulating pattern. It seemed warmer then
the smooth surface. I tried with lip and ear, and believe the impression is
correct. In the middle the pavements too thick for a trench pick.

When the torches were extinguished, and I was in a freezing sweat, I left
the „moonshaft“, dressed and went where the bats are, and bagged seven. Jurek
stuffed them with bread and herbs and they became exquisite „pigeons“.

Slavek and Olga, his other daughter, came about dusk with hay, straw, a
sheep's fleece, more medicinal herbs - selfheal and stonecrop - and seeds from
the Iris, an excellent coffee substitute. I accompanied him, fetched pine
torches, two long poles, and was back at about midnight. Martin got the last
aspirins, honey-water; and Jurek both watches.

October 26, 1944.

It was a good night. I went into the moonshaft to continue experimenting. On
my longest assembly of poles the carbide lamp did not light the upper end of
these cliffs. I fired above the lighted area; the bullet struck huge sparks and
made deafening echoes. Then horizontally at the back wall with similar effects
- sparks, roarings, no splinters, but a half finger long welt which gave a
pungent smell. After that I continued in my digging in the left moonhorn and
saw that the wavy pattern extends downward; but in the right horn I found no
such pattern.

I left the moonshaft to probe the front wall and its surroundings. Next to
the stalactites are some enamel-like flecks, which, scarped, yield the powder
too fine to be collected without glue, which I will try to boil from our
pigeon's claws. I wished to obtain a sample of a peculiar material of the
walls, but even firing two bullets into the crack, upon the protrusions and
hitting them, I received only ricochets, a blast of thunder, welts, and the
same pungent smell.

Returning to camp I caught some bats and we again had "pigeons". I
ordered Jurek to carefully remove and any trace of them, and kept the claws.
The Slaveks arrived as usual at nightfall bringing this time a quarter of a
deer, 1/2 kilogram of salt, and a tin of carbide. Jurek took both watches.

October 27, 1944.

Martin died, slept into death. Jurek knows his kin, took charge of his
belongings, including his wallet with 643 crowns, watch with chain and my
certificate. Now we are free and ready to leave and rejoin our battalion which
is somewhere east of Kosice. With his stick Jurek can march some 10 kilometers
daily, and have to move carefully anyway. We will start tomorrow.

At 10 a.m. I was in the cave probing passages for a way around behind the
moonshaft; looked also for ice and poisonous air about which Slavek has spoken,
and found none, though there may be some. Then I slipped into the moonshaft to
sketch, dig, and ponder, and returned to camp at about 4 p.m. I ordered Jurek
to prepare our packs, clean the weapons, boil food for seven days, and have
ready what we will not need to be returned to Slaveks. He and both girls, if as
the family had sensed that Martin died, came and we carried him into the dwarf
pines to the trench where he had received his mortal wound, took turns to dig
his grave, prayed, and buried him in a blanket. Slavek is to set up a good
cross next spring for which I gave him 150 crowns. Slavek briefed me as best he
could about the enemy eastward from here. Jurek and I were back in our grotto
at midnight, and he took both watches; he can sleep most of the day tomorrow.

October 28, 1944.

Restful night, good breakfast. Cut my name, etc., on a leather strip, and
together with the golden back of my watch rolled and inserted both engravings
into a glass bottle, plugged it with a pebble and ball of clay mixed with
charcoal, and deposited this record in the moonshaft, on the top of the ashes
of my torches. It may stay there for a long time, possibly until the structure
is completely hidden behind its curtain of stalactites and stalagmites. Slavek
has no son to tell him about his cave-mystery; his womenfolk don't know about
it, and anyway daughters usually marry to other villages. In a few decades
nobody will know, If I do not back and have the structure explored.

I sat there by my fire speculating: What is this structure, with walls 2
meters thick and shape that I cannot imagine of any purpose known nowdays? How
far does it reach into the rocks? Is there more behind the moonshaft? Which
incident or who put it into this mountain? Is it a fossilized mane-made object?
Is there truth in legends, like Plato's, about long-lost civilizations with
magic technologies which our rationale cannot grasp nor believe?

Fig. 3.

I am a sober, academically trained person but must admit that here, between
these blacks, satiny, mathematically-curved cliffs I do feel as if in the grip
of an exceedingly strange and grim power. I can understand that simple but
intelligent and practical men like Slavek and his forebears sense here
witchery, conceal it, ever made known, it would attract armies of tourists, and
commercialization which would probably ruin their nature-bound trade and honest
life. If and when I came back it will be with a team a secrecy-bound experts: geologist,
metallurgist, cave expert; and if the object is true importance for the
advancement of knowledge and proper civilization, will to have to be found to
respect the Slavek`s interests.

On my way back to camp I burrowed and hid the crawl holes which lead towards
the wall; the cave may have entrances which Slavek does not know, and some
chance discoverer may start blasting "for treasure" before a
scientific team can get there. I was in camp after 3 p.m., and about 5 all
three Slaveks arrived, bringing some hard-boiled eggs. Jurek asked permission
to talk privately with Slavek, and then Hanka was carefully sounded out by her
father whether she would accept Jurek as her husband. She cried and laughed,
Jurek gave her his photograph and golden watch which his father had brought
from America; Jurek is a well-to do carpenter in Bratislava. I am invited to
the wedding and will try to come. To make sure, I gave Hanka a letter to a
befriended jeweler and commanded her to get the nicest set of Bohemian garnets
as a wedding present. The Slaveks had brought their family Bible, and I made
some entries.

With the hardy Slovak handshakes and "Mnoho stiastie, Pan Buh pozehnaj
Vas, Buh s tebou", we shouldered our weapons and packs and went. When we
entered the pines and turned we saw Slavek concealing his cave and the girls
sweeping away our tracks. The moon was bright and the snow glittered.

October 30, 1944.

We moved during the dark hours only and along the timber line. During daylight,
camping snugly below a fine pinetree, were alarmed by the sound of infantry
fire; approaching to investigate we observed a strong group of skirmishing with
a ski party of Wehrmacht and Polish Blue Police (fascists). The fascists went
soon, and, joining the insurgents we were their guests for a whole day. They
were a mixed group of Hechaluts, ZOB, DROR, from the Rzeszow region in adjacent
Poland, who had helped in our Uprising and were now on their way back - through
immense snow - to their usual sectors between Cracow and Przemysl. Their
physician was Rachel W. the widow of a murdered Jewish doctor; she knew and
told us about the exploits of the famous Jesia Fryman Banda against the
Nazists; and fed us two fine, hot meals. When these valiant Jewish fighters
were marching on northward, we had to go southward, towards Kosice, Which we
reached on our 6th day; and there receiving directions we could proceed to join
our battalion which was awaiting the next offensive of the Red Army to join it
until to the end of the war.

In the very last days of World War II, on my way towards Bohemia, I
revisited the place. The Slaveks lived temporarily at Zdar. I visited Martin's
grave and looked at the cave entrance. I have taken the animal teeth I had
collected to the curator of paleontology at Uzhorod, and he classified them as
adult cave bear, Ursus spaeleus. Thereupon I speculated: the crack is too
small; the lump of limestone and stalagmites in front of the crack would not
let any debris through; this bear seems to have fallen into the moonshaft,
which may have had a connection to the surface.

In correspondence dealing with plans for the publications of this journal,
Dr. George W. Moore suggested that the moonshaft might have been dissolved from
a steeply dipping limestone layer between curved parallel sheets of chert. I am
skeptical. All the inner surfaces of the moonshaft are composed of the same
material. Also, such an hypothesis does not explain the peculiar, exactly
parallel, finely grooved pattern on the back surface (or wall) of the left
horn.

On my last visit to the place, I examined the mountainside above the cave
and found no sinkholes or pits, the assumed connections toward the moonshaft.
But on these very steep slopes in the Tatra Mountains, rockslides could have
obliterated or filled in any such connections.